As the launch of London's congestion charge draws near, a look at how road pollution may be improved in the future.

British roads do not have to be the choking, miserable places they so often are.

We can engineer our way out of pollution, if not away from the congestion which makes it so bad.

People of the next generation will use fuels so much cleaner than ours they will wonder how we survived.

But - at least to begin with - we shall find it expensive to make the change.

There are a number of substitutes for petrol and diesel fuel: biodiesel, electricity, ethanol, hydrogen, methanol, natural gas, propane, and solar energy.

Biodiesel is a renewable fuel made from vegetable oils or recycled restaurant fats. It reduces serious air pollutants such as particulates, carbon monoxide, and hydrocarbons.

Alternative land-use

Blends of 20% biodiesel with 80% petroleum diesel can be used in unmodified diesel engines, or biodiesel can be used in its pure form, though that may require engine modifications.

Recharging the battery

Electricity can power battery and fuel cell vehicles. The electricity for recharging batteries comes from conventionally generated sources, or from renewables like solar or wind energy.

Fuel cell vehicles use electricity produced from a reaction when hydrogen and oxygen are combined in the fuel cell "stack". The cells produce no pollution and leave only two by-products: heat and water.

Ethanol is an alcohol-based fuel made from grain crops, such as wheat, that have been converted into sugars. Ethanol produced from biomass - trees and grasses - is called bioethanol.

This is an option that might appeal to farmers looking to use their land to grow a saleable crop, despite the European farm surpluses.

Methanol is another alcohol fuel, most of it produced from natural gas, though coal or biomass are suitable as well.

Here already

Supplies of hydrogen are virtually unlimited as it can be produced from cheap and renewable sources - water, for one. Either alone, or mixed with natural gas, it can power a car. But its optimum use is as fuel for fuel cell vehicles.

The hydrogen age approaches

Natural gas is another possibility. It can be stored on a vehicle in tanks as compressed natural gas, or cooled to a liquid state, liquefied natural gas.